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# Preface by the Editor
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Preface
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War has been a recurring form of violent interaction between communities
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in the Sudan since the Stone Age, and many chronological divisions in
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the history of the country are set at events such as wars, battles,
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conquests, and peace treaties. Still, warfare has often been an
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overlooked topic among researchers working in Sudan and Nubia. An
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explanation is possibly that periods of stability or evolving complexity
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are usually longer than episodes of war, which occur during relatively
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short timespans at irregular intervals. Another reason may be that
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contemporary Sudan has been a violent place, and this has possibly made
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war in the country a sensitive topic and restrained researchers from
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making warfare their research object.
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The modern borders of the Sudan are a construct of war. First through
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the conquests by the Ottoman rulers of Egypt between the 1820s and the
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1870s. Then the Anglo-Egyptian conquest in 1898, which also incorporated
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the independent sultanate of Darfur in 1916.[^1] The borders of the
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Anglo-Egyptian condominium were maintained when Sudan became independent
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in 1956, but the northern and southern parts of the independent country
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thereafter fought on and off in the longest civil war in Africa. The war
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was terminated with the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005, which
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culminated with a referendum where the southern part of the country
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voted for secession. The country was split in two in 2011. Nevertheless,
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violent conflict and war continued as the new states of South Sudan and
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Sudan were fighting over territory and oil fields in the border regions.
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Since late 2013, South Sudan has become deeply split in a civil war that
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is dividing the country along ethnic boundaries with great human
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sufferings. In the north, Sudan had a central government at war with
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systematically marginalized peripheries and a suppressed population.
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Increasing resistance from the inhabitants resulted in the toppling of
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the old regime in 2019. The transitional government failed to install
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civilian rule in Sudan, and the military took full control of the
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government in a coup in October 2021. The Sudanese people have taken to
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the streets numerous times since 2019 demanding civilian rule, and their
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persistence brings hope for a civilian government and democratic state
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in Sudan.
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War has deep roots in Sudan. An Upper Paleolithic cemetery at Jebel
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Sahaba in the far north of the country is often quoted as the earliest
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evidence of war in world history.[^2] Around 25 victims at Jebel Sahaba
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exhibited injuries from attacks with bows and arrows.[^3] The
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extremities of the earliest war and the violent conflicts in modern
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times demonstrate that war in the Sudan covers a great time span and
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various levels of organization -- from violent clashes between ethnic
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groups to warfare between states and civil wars. However, exact evidence
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for violent conflict and war in Nubia and Sudan is limited for all
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periods. Iconography and texts are often our only indications for
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warfare, but these data are indirect sources and not always reliable
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information. Although historians have researched the wars that have
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ridden the country in modern times, the time is ripe to study wars in
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the Sudan from a broader academic perspective. I hope the articles in
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this volume of Dotawo will stimulate to provide more attention to
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warfare in scholarship on the Sudan, as this will increase our
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understanding of interaction between people in this land.
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# About the Issue
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Despite being delayed by the pandemic and its consequences for research,
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we are delighted to finally publish this *Dotawo* volume on "War in
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Sudan". Five articles are included after some contributors were
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prevented from completing their articles. The aim of this thematic issue
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is to offer new insights on wars and violent conflict in the Sudan
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either as case-studies or as broader historical patterns.
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The volume is chronologically structured, beginning with the editor's
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contribution on the mid-4^th^ millennium BCE border war between peoples
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in Nubia and Egypt. Then follows Matthieu Honegger's presentation of the
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famous archers from Kerma during the latter half of the 3^rd^ millennium
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BCE. The bows and arrows in these earliest Kerma graves have never been
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presented in such detail before, and the appearance of the archers are
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linked to the emergence of the kingdom of Kerma. Next, Uroš Matić offers
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a fresh perspective on warfare and gender in textual and visual media
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during the Napatan and Meroitic periods (8^th^ century BCE to 4^th^
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century CE), followed by Alexandros Tsakos\' article on warfare terms in
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medieval sources (ca. 5^th^ century CE to 15^th^ century CE). The volume
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concludes with Roksana Hajduga\'s presentation of the art of the
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2018/2019 revolution in Sudan. She explores how the war between
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non-violent protesters and a brutal regime caused a change in the
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freedom of expressions and greater creativity in Fine Arts, Street art,
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and online art. The volume thus covers some major chronological phases
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of Nubia and Sudan from the earliest Bronze Age until today.
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The articles in this issue also cover a wide geographical area along the
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Nile. The first article by Hafsaas focus on the First Cataract region in
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the northernmost part of Nubia and outside the borders of today's Sudan.
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Honegger's article on the archers is set at Kerma above the Third
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Cataract. In the article by Matić, we move further south to Napata below
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the Fourth Cataract and Merowe between the Fifth and the Sixth
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Cataracts. The article on the medieval era by Tsakos covers all of
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Nubia, while the last article by Hajduga considers the southernmost
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region in the volume by focusing on the capital Khartoum.
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**Dotawo's Open Access Commitment**
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*Dotawo: A Journal of Nubian Studies* has been a journal with open
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access to both readers and authors since its launch in 2014. Since the
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previous volume, *Dotawo* has been even more committed to open
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scholarship by linking the references in the journal to records with
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open access, as far as possible. The aim is to give access to research
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to those without privileged access to institutional libraries.[^4] This
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great work to make the research openly available has largely been
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undertaken by Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei, managing editor from 2014 to
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2022. I am grateful to managing editor Alexandros Tsakos for the
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typesetting in an open-source infrastructure. Personally, publishing
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openly in this way is incredible despite the additional efforts. I hope
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the readers find the result accessible and appealing.
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**Acknowledgements**
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I wish to thank the peer-reviewers who spent their time and used their
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knowledge to improve the quality of the articles in this issue of
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*Dotawo*.
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**References**
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Crevecoeur, Isabelle, Marie‑Hélène Dias‑Meirinho, Antoine ZAZZO, Daniel
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ANTOINE, and François BON. \"New Insights on Interpersonal Violence in
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the Late Pleistocene Based on the Nile Valley Cemetery of Jebel
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Sahaba.\" *Scientific Reports* 11/9991 (2021): 1-13.
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GAT, Azar. *War in Human Civilization*. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
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2008.
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van Gerven Oei, Vincent W.J. "Preface by the Editor." *Dotawo: A Journal
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of Nubian Studies* 7 (2020): 1-10.
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HAFSAAS-TSAKOS, Henriette. *War on the Southern Frontier of the Emerging
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State of Ancient Egypt. A Warfare Perspective on the History of the
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A-Group People in Lower Nubia during the 4^th^ millennium BCE*.
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Ph.D-thesis. Bergen: University of Bergen, 2015.
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Otterbein, Keith F. *How War Began*. Texas A&M University Press, 2004.
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[^1]: Hafsaas-Tsakos, *War on the Southern Frontier of the Emerging
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State of Ancient Egypt*, p. 3.
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[^2]: E.g., Otterbein, *How War Began*, pp. 74-75; Gat, *War in Human
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Civilization*, p. 15.
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[^3]: Crevecoeur et al., "New Insights on Interpersonal Violence in the
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Late Pleistocene Based on the Nile Valley Cemetery of Jebel Sahaba."
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[^4]: Van Gerven Oei, "Preface by the Editor," pp. 1-3.
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# Bibliography
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